Abby’s Guide > Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) > Discussions > SeaFoam test
Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) Discussions |
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trouts2
Location: Marlboro MA
Joined: Dec 8, 2007
Points: 1328
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SeaFoam test
Original Message Dec 26, 2009 11:52 am |
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SeaForm makes many claims about what it can do. Injector cleaner Carburetor cleaner Carbon cleaner, Fuel stabilizer Frees lifters – rings De-icer anti-jell Upper cylinder lub Dries oil and fuel Cleans carbon as you drive. Cures hesitations ,stalls, pings, and rough idle due to carbon buildup. Cleans dirty engine part internally by removing harmful gums, varnish and carbon. WORKS AND PERFORMS INSTANTLY. That’s quite a versatile list of claims. Given the repeated claim for carbon it should do something when contacting carbon. SeaFoam says 1 pint treats 25 gallons. That’s a mix of 200 to 1. If it can clean at that mix it should dissolve carbon easily at full strength. Below is a picture of carbon put in a class with full strength SeaFrom for several hours with occasional shaking. There is no breakup of the particles. The other picture of a head and piston with carbon. The loose carbon was wiped off and the rags dipped with SeaFoam and rubbed on the head and piston. The rags are slightly discolored but not from dissolved particles. The discolor is just picked up particles of carbon a rag without SeaFoam will pick up. Given that it did not dissolve carbon full strength and would not remove carbon with a rag directly on a piston and head it seems doubtful that at a mix or 200 to 1 it will do very much rushing over the head and piston of an engine. SeaFoam does not seem to do anything. What went wrong here? No dissolved carbon in the glass and only slight smudging on the rags with no removal of carbon from the head or piston after rubbing. What’s going on? If it does not do anything at full strength how can it work at 200 to 1 where only slight fraction of the 200 to 1 mix will actually contact the carbon when an engine is running
This message was modified Dec 26, 2009 by trouts2
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friiy
Location: Las Vegas, The Desert
Joined: Apr 12, 2008
Points: 600
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Re: SeaFoam test
Reply #15 Dec 27, 2009 6:56 pm |
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Hey guys, I don't know if this is true... I have nothing to back it up but what was told to me by a Vender for these products.. I was told that Seafoam, and other products Soften and leach into the carbon... The carbon is then able to be burned or reduce in the normal combustion process ( over a period of time) . As far as cleaning jets, I believe you can clean things "harshly" or "softly"... depending on how fast you need the resultand at what cost to the equipment........ I won't use a wire wheel on a drill to clean stains off my teeth, but I will use a toothbrush.. Friiy.... Hey Trouts, If you want to get Carbon off a head or piston, I suggest a $14 Harbour Freight mini air die grinder and a 3M Roloc disc ( blue or grey) ... Check them out Friiy
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trouts2
Location: Marlboro MA
Joined: Dec 8, 2007
Points: 1328
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Re: SeaFoam test
Reply #18 Dec 28, 2009 12:18 pm |
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What Friiy mentioned was interesting and made me thing about carbon “dissolving” as opposed to loosened somehow and being purged. I snooped around the net, watched a few videos on Utube and read a bunch of claims. There were suggestions there that the carbon is not dissolved by SeaFoam. That the action was loosening the carbon binders so it would fly out. Given the testimonials, this morning I tried SeaFoam on a 7hp Tecumseh first dumping some Seafoam directly into the plug hole, giving several squirts in through throat until stumbling and white smoke dumping out of the muffler. Then a big squirt to stall the engine and let it set for a while to let SeaFoam act. I checked through the plug hole pretty good and noted the carbon inside on the piston and valves. I noted the carbon at the base of the plug hole and changed plugs to fairly gummed up plug, sootie and blackened with carbon. No noticeable effect after doing this test three times. I put some SeaFoam in a cup and Stable in another. I added about 10 drops of water and let them set for a few hours shaking them occasionally. When shook the water blob would dissolve into the solvents but in a short time form back up into a blob. Possibly the stuff acts by vaporizing the water but after a few hours it seemed like the same amount of blob was in there. No noticeable effect. I called SeaFoam and asked to speak with a tech and got one. I told him I was leery about the product and have seen many positive and negative comments on the net so did some tests and would like to go over them to see what he thought. He said both of the tests I did were valid, i.e.1. the carbon in a container with full strength SeaFram, without gas and 2. applying SeaFoam directly to the head and piston. The 7hp test he said was also valid along with the water test. For applying SeaFoam directly to the head and piston test he said it SeaFoam will act without heat/combustion no gas needed to activate anything. He explained what would happen. It would work by breaking down the binders of the carbon which were “gum”, “varnish” and “other unburned products” which bind the carb to metal. The quotes were his words. It would act full strength without combustion or mixed with gas. He said, SeaFoam does not dissolve carbon, it breaks it down into minute particles so they can be blown away. That is, the gums and varnish binders would be broken down. That did not happened with applying SeaFoam directly to the piston and head. A lot of SeaFram was applied and letting it set for a while to give it a chance to activate. Nothing came off or on the rags which were also soaked with SeaFram. No carbon removal, no breakdown of gum, varnish or burnt products as he said should happen. For the carbon flakes in a container with full strength SeaFoam he said it should reduce the carbon binders and cause them to break up clouding the liquid in the container. That cloud would be the broken down binders and minute particles of carbon. That did not happen or anything close to that happen. The amount of particles was the same as the start, no breakup or clouding. SeaFoam did not do anything. I mentioned how I did not get the expected result. He said he has done the same tests on pistons and carbon chunks in a container just like my tests. He got completely different results. He said the carbon on the piston came off and he ended up with a clean top on the piston. He said the chunks of carbon in a container broke up and clouded the straight SeaFoam. He said it worked fine. That was not the result I got. His results were quite different than mine so I repeated the tests this morning with the same result I got last time and again much different that what he got. For the running SeaFoam in the 7hp motor he said it should have had an effect. I could not see any. For the water in the cup of SeaFoam he said once the water blob was broken up it should stay broken up. He said he did that test also and what he got was the water stayed broken in a cloud. Very different result than what I got which was the blob reformed after a while. It might useful for SeaFoam to break up water like that but a water blob in gas will cloud into the gas when shaken also. Could have been a defective can of SeaFoam. I tried the head and container chunk tests with two different cans of SeaFoam. Could be a bad batch of SeaFoam so both cans have defective SeaFoam. These tests are pretty simple so you can see for yourself what you get as a result.
This message was modified Dec 28, 2009 by trouts2
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